Alamo Crossing, Arizona | |
Settlement Type: | Ghost town |
Pushpin Map: | Arizona#USA |
Pushpin Label: | Alamo Crossing |
Pushpin Label Position: | top |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Type1: | State |
Subdivision Type2: | County |
Subdivision Name: | United States |
Subdivision Name1: | Arizona |
Subdivision Name2: | Mohave |
Established Title: | Founded |
Established Date: | 1899 |
Extinct Title: | Officially abandoned |
Extinct Date: | 1918 |
Founder: | Tom Rodgers |
Elevation Ft: | 1237 |
Elevation M: | 377 |
Timezone: | MST (no DST) |
Utc Offset: | -7 |
Coordinates: | 34.2606°N -113.5828°W |
Alamo Crossing is a ghost town in Mohave County, Arizona, United States. The town was settled in the late 1890s, in what was then the Arizona Territory. It served as a camp for mining prospectors in the manganese-rich Artillery Mountains, being the only town in the area. After 1918, the post office permanently closed, but the town was only intermittently abandoned, with its founders often present through until at least the mid-1950s. The town was intentionally flooded in 1968 to create Alamo Lake. In 2020, the area of Alamo was revived for mining again, this time for surface-level gold prospecting.
Founded by Tom Rodgers in the late 1890s, though the town road to Signal was supposedly built in 1860 (or earlier), Alamo Crossing was never a big town. It is on one side of the small Artillery Mountains range. Here there are many concentrated ore deposits, and the town was founded as a non-permanent base for mining prospectors in the area, with the residents typically camping out.[1] During its heyday, the town only consisted of a five-stamp mill and a few stores. The town's post office opened on November 23, 1899, and was permanently closed on December 31, 1918.[2] The post office had previously closed on December 15, 1900, and was re-opened with the town name Alamo on March 30, 1911.
The town was inconsistently abandoned through the 20th century: a 1949 account says that the Artillery Mountains area's "only inhabitants are a few prospectors and miners and two or three ranchers. The entire population in 1938 was probably less than 25 persons. Alamo is the only settlement, and at times even it is abandoned." Local legend tells that Native Americans attacked the town, raiding the store and poisoning the storekeeper, and the postmaster soon after fled the town due to boredom, stealing the post office's money. The more likely truth is that the mines simply ran dry. In the early 1950s, during a manganese boom, the camp saw some revived interest,[1] [3] and Alamo Crossing served as an important river crossing during this time,[4] but it was said to be soon abandoned again.[1] [3]
The Rodgers brothers were still living in Alamo in 1928, when Al attests that the first manganese from the area was shipped in "about 11 cars" to Alabama. They were also still around in 1949, and had many unpatented mine claims nearby. One, known as Oversight, was a few miles north of the town; it opened in 1952 and was shut down in 1954 after producing over 1,000 long tons (1,016.1 metric tons) of ore. Another was Mesa Manganese, with 27 mines in the claim, located about 17 miles (27.4 km) away but most easily accessible from Alamo. Discovered in 1949, Tom Rodgers and his mining prospector associate John M. Neal of Kingman, Arizona, leased the Mesa Manganese mines to a Californian company in 1953. It produced a few hundred tons of ore, much of which was processed in the area, but was also closed in 1954. Other 1950s, mine claims around Alamo Crossing include the Castenada group, the Shannon group, and the Black Burro group.[4]
Other residents in the 1940s–50s include Mr and Mrs George Lewis and a Mr Kimmel. The climate was such that Alamo often flooded for a few weeks during flood season.[5]
Alamo Crossing's population was 18 in the 1960 census.[6] In 1968, the Bill Williams River was dammed and the now-ghost town was submerged, with parts of the reservoir 80feet deep.
In 2020, new mines were opened around Alamo, with the British company Power Metal Resources (POW) having begun digging for gold nuggets after visiting the area and seeing "a 30 cm deep test 'pit' excavated and three small gold nuggets turned up with a borrowed metal detector".[7] Value the Markets
Today, the town is submerged at the bottom of Alamo Lake, with the small town of Alamo Lake, Arizona, nearby.[9] The remains of Alamo Crossing are still intact underwater. Though almost untouched for 50 years, it was "one of the best preserved ghost towns in the state of Arizona" before it was flooded; the town road still exists, leading into the water.[2] [10]